Model renderings: 7
Photographs: 48
Archival images: 0
Videos: 0
Object catalog: 1
Originally built by Thutmose III - 1479 BCE to 1425 BCE (Show in timemap)
Modified by Nectanebo I - 380 BCE to 362 BCE (Show in timemap)
Contains features: Obelisks at Contra Temple
Other works initiated by Thutmose III:
Akhmenu, Wadjet Hall, 7th Pylon, Thutmose III Shrine, Enclosures and Gates, Sacred Lake, 6th Pylon and Court, 5th Pylon and Court, Obelisks of 7th Pylon, Station of the King and Corridor, Obelisks of Festival Hall Center Pair, Central Bark Shrine, Palace of Ma'at, Obelisks of Wadjet Hall, Pylon and Festival Court of Thutmose II, East Exterior Wall
Other works initiated by Nectanebo I:
1st Pylon, Opet Temple, Shoshenq I Court, Enclosures and Gates, Bab el Amara Gate, Other Processional Ways
The Contra Temple was located east of the Akhmenu between the eastern obelisks of Hatshepsut. The temple opened to the east. The low screen walls of the building's façade were interspersed with six square pillars fronted by Osiride statues. Decoration on the pillars' other three sides depicted the king embracing Amun-Ra. The building's wide front hall led to a series of small chambers, inside which scenes showed the king standing before offering tables dedicated to the gods Amun and Min. A naos, carved from a single piece of calcite, was located in the central chamber. This naos housed a (now broken) dyad of Thutmose III and Amun-Ra (though one scholar has suggested that Hatshepsut may have originally been depicted).
Measurements: The building measures approximately 15.5m across and 8.2m deep.
Contra temples, usually appended to the rear wall of a temple and opening outward, provided a location for those not allowed to enter the temple proper to interact with the divinities. This example, standing against the eastern wall of the temple built by Thutmose III, offered one such place on the eastern side of Karnak. Known as the "chapel of the hearing ear," the shrine allowed the populace of Thebes to petition a statue of the king with Amun-Ra.
Construction materials: sandstone, calcite ("Egyptian alabaster")
The reconstruction of the contra temple was based on a plan of the structure (Van Siclen 1986: pl. 10), a general detailed plan of overall Karnak (Carlotti 2001: pl. 1), and photographs of the building today.
The walls of the temple were covered with a simple sandstone pattern on the model.
Neither the central calcite naos nor the Osiris statues were included in the model.
Nectanebo I added two small shrines to the northern and southern sides of the contra temple, enclosing the bases of Hatshepsut's obelisks. These chapels had round, engaged columns in the center of both their northern and southern walls.
Construction materials: limestone
Carlotti, Jean-François (2001), L'Akh-menou de Thoutmosis III à Karnak : etude architecturale. Paris: Recherche sur les civilisations.
Nims, Charles (1971), “The Eastern Temple at Karnak.” Beiträge zur ägyptischen Bauforschung und Altertumskunde, vol. 12, 107-111.
Teeter, Emily (1993), “Popular Worship in Ancient Egypt: Contrary to what is often written, commoners had access to their deities.” KMT: a modern journal of Ancient Egypt, vol. 4, no. 2, 28-37.
Van Siclen, Charles (1986), The Alabaster Shrine of King Amenhotep II. San Antonio: Brooklyn Museum, pl 10.
Borchardt, Ludwig (1938), Ägyptische tempel mit Umgang. Cairo: Selbstverlag des herausgebers.
Varille, Alexandre (1950), “Description sommaire du sanctuarie oriental d’Amon-Rê à Karnak.” Annales du service des antiquités de l’Égypte, vol. 50, 137-247.